Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Heat have game plan in place

Screenings are complete and workouts resume Wednesday

- By Ira Winderman

Because it is the Miami Heat, even the informal, optional, voluntary workouts amid the NBA shutdown are meticulous­ly planned.

So starting Wednesday, those who opt to participat­e in the team’s reopening of the training facilities at AmericanAi­rlines Arena have been given schedules for their report times, for what the team has decided will be three such sessions per week.

Fourteen of the 17 players under contract are in South Florida and available to participat­e, a group that includes two-way players Kyle Alexander and Gabe Vincent.

Forwards Jimmy Butler, Andre Iguodala and Solomon Hill remain away from the team, in California, awaiting greater clarity on the league’s overall plans.

The NBA currently is limiting the sessions to four players in a team’s practice facility at a time, each working with a personally designated ball and a coach spaced at least 12 feet away while wearing gloves and a mask.

The league is allowing the sessions where permitted by local government ordinance, with Miami-Dade officially granting such clearance last week.

The Heat already have conducted prescreeni­ng tests with the players participat­ing, including antibody tests but not COVID-19 tests, with the local supply not considered ample enough for such usage. Temperatur­e checks will be mandatory in advance of participat­ion, as will quarantine for players returning from beyond South Florida.

The NBA has stressed that the sessions are voluntary, with the league still

The Heat played a comically cruel part in Jordan’s greatness too.

Like: Jordan playing 36 holes of golf at Fisher Island by day and beating the Heat in a playoff game by night.

Like: His jersey being raised in the Heat arena by Pat Riley three years before it was raised in Chicago.

Like: Jordan trash-talking Heat guard Steve Smith one bored night, saying after his first basket: “Thirty-eight.” Smith didn’t know what that meant.

“Thirty-six,” Jordan said after his next basket. It hit Smith a basket later: Jordan was counting down an expected 40-point game. You can’t fit that story in 10 episodes?

But nothing described Jordan and the Heat better than the Willie Burton Game.

This was the third game of a best-of-five playoff series in 1992. It was the first (and only) game in Miami. Jordan struggled in the first half. He looked sluggish.

Burton, a mercurial rookie, blocked one of Jordan’s shots. He couldn’t contain himself as the teams walked to the locker rooms at half with the Heat leading, 56-51.

“I’m shutting him down!” Burton yelled. “I got him on lockdown!”

When the teams came out before the second half, Jordan approached Heat coach Kevin Loughery, who was his first coach in Chicago. Jordan said he had a cold and wasn’t feeling well. But Burton was all the medicine he needed.

“I’m about to turn it up on you,’’ Jordan told Loughery. He finished with 56 points on 20-of-30 shooting.

“Something got me going,” he said afterward as the Bulls swept the Heat out of the playoffs.

“I hope we learned a lesson,” Loughery said.

The lesson nearly three decades later is to ask for Jordan’s shoes after a game like that. Heat assistant Alvin Gentry did (come on, an assistant coach asking an opposing player for shoes — that doesn’t make 10 episodes)? Gentry got them too and says they’re worth good money now.

The larger lesson is how unimportan­t the Heat were to Jordan’s story.

Even the Heat’s biggest moment against Jordan is lost. In Riley’s first season with the Heat in 1996, he had eight available players in the hours after the trade deadline when they made three deals. Jordan’s team that broke the NBA record with 72 regular-season wins was in town too.

“Why are we even here? No one thinks we can win,” Riley said in the locker room before the game in starting his motivation­al talk.

Jordan’s 31 points weren’t enough. Heat guard Rex Chapman had 39 points on 10-of-11 shooting from the 3-point line. The

Heat’s win is monumental to history too — one extra Chicago win would have come in handy when Golden State notched 73 wins in 2015-16.

Riley, as the years went, seemed haunted by being blocked by Jordan in the 1990s with the New York Knicks and then the Heat. He’d slip notes under Jordan’s hotel room door saying they weren’t done competing, Jordan said in his Hall of Fame speech.

When they did compete, Jordan made a habit of turning on the court to Riley as his Bulls won another playoff series. He’d deliver a golf swing to say Riley’s basketball season was over.

“I had my plan,” Riley said the day Jordan retired. “I had a retractabl­e golf club in training camp for four years. The day that we won, I was going to whip it out, and I was going to …”

He gave a golf swing.

Coming in Episode 11.

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DAVID SANTIAGO/MIAMI HERALD/TNS

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